*Specifically with birthdays, our local food pantry explicitly asks for cake mix, oil & icing as well as cash donations so they can buy eggs and milk - many kids receiving food from food banks have to forego a birthday cake. Those ingredients cost no more than $10 all-in. From a calorie perspective, that's not a great use of food bank resources, and yet those supplies are some of the top requested by the bank. I like to think that T4T and Christmas is along those same lines.
I'm so glad to hear your local food pantry is doing this!! It means the world to a kid. One of my favourite charities provides a birthday box for kids. The box contains a gift for the child, a treat to take to school, some decorations, cake mix and some snacks to serve to visitors. I think the box is worth €35 or €40. That's a tiny amount of money for me, but for a child, being able to take a bag of mini candybars to school to hand out to their classmates, instead of being ridiculed, being able to tell their friends what they got for their birthday, that's a lifelong memory. For a child, being able to invite a few friends for their birthday for the first time, because they know there are a few balloons, a cake, a bag of crisps, a carton of juice, that's life changing for a kid.
I'm sure not everyone can imagine that, and I'm happy for them if they can't even imagine that experience because it means they didn't go through it. My partner and I can remember being the left out kids. Something as small as this is something the child will remember their whole life.
Sorry, I'm trying. I see the appeal, but still struggling to understand the logic. The criteria seems to be that the gift is "appreciated" (something they'll remember forever..) But it's applied one-sidedly. How does that prioritize these kids over others?
A child somewhere else in the world receiving food for the first time in days? A child getting a cure for parasites eating them up and causing terrible pain? Someone receiving treatment for an infection that's making them go blind? I would think these kids would appreciate this immensely and be an experience they'll remember forever? How does a birthday value over this?
My wife and I brought supplies to a rural school in Africa when we were there years ago. It was nothing to us, but also quite life-changing for those kids. They sang to use and practiced English thanking us. Quite lovely. I only wish I could have done more (and I hope to)
I think this question has pretty much been answered, but, yes, sure, there are many people having it way worse than children in first world countries that don't get to celebrate their birthdays. By that logic we should all donate all of our money to the poorest countries in Africa.
And we should donate plenty of money to effective charities in developing countries. And I do. But I also choose to donate to my own community, for several reasons:
- I am confronted with poverty in my own community very frequently and I hate seeing that
- While no one kids are starving and dying from preventable illness in my city, plenty of children do suffer from
relative deprivation.
- Relative means they're way worse off than their peers, which causes suffering
- Relative deprivation is one of the main causes of issues within a community
- To live in a stable, high-trust society, and to continue to have a stable, high-trust society, we need to reduce relative deprivation as much as possible.
Relative deprivation is growing in my country and it's one of the major causes of the growing gap between rich and poor. I grew up low income, but not deprived. My partner did grow up way more deprived than I did - as in, they couldn't join school day trips because their parents couldn't afford it, and had to sit with a different class while classmates where having fun somewhere, couldn't afford school books for all of their subjects etc. Sure, that's not as bad as starving. No one is saying that it is. But many people with a background that's relatively deprived end up as low-income, low-opportunity adults. They have a much lower chance of learning a trade or going to college because those opportunities require stability, they have a much higher chance of ending up in crime, they are much more likely to raise children that are relatively deprived too.
My grandparents lived through the Depression and WWII and they never felt deprived even though they literally lived through starvation. But in their case, everyone was going through the same experience. I think that makes a huge difference in society. That's why there are way more riots and violent clashes now during Covid. The professional class (people like me) have thrived during Covid. We're all working from home, saving money, the value of our investments have gone up, we're all donating to the foodbank now. People who have blue collar and pink collar jobs are in insecure situations, are in danger of infection, some entire industries have closed down, their income is a lot lower and with the rising prices for petrol and gas for heating, many can barely afford to turn on the heating or drive their old cars to work. And then they see people like me, happily working from home and getting richer every day. No wonder that causes riots.
I absolutely agree with
@havregryn that the idea that many people in Western Europe have about poverty is based on Dickensian stories and that poverty in this day and age looks differently. And I am always so extremely annoyed when people post free shit on Facebook and require people to send in an essay about why they deserve this and they pick the one with the most tearjerking story and then complain if people aren't thankful enough. But even in Western European countries there's still poverty behind front doors. And if my little gesture of sending a box of cake mix to a deprived kid allows them to invite people for their birthday for the first time, yes, that little moment of happiness is important. Not just to me but to the stability of society.
That doesn't mean that we don't need to also massively change things at the systemic level. In Europe, most importantly the massive gap between richer and poorer countries. Many people from poorer European countries move to my country for work and they are treated like dirt. They live in inhumane conditions. People say "well, they come here voluntarily" but there's a reason they come here and still stay. It's because the alternative is even worse. If we want the EU to survive we need to fix this. One of the tiny things I do to improve this is to donate to a charity that helps Polish people in my country that are in need of help. I know it's not much but it's better than nothing.